My Kind of Lady

"My Kind of Lady"
Single by Supertramp
from the album …Famous Last Words…
B-side"Know Who You Are"
ReleasedJanuary 1983[1]
GenrePop
Length4:24 (single), 5:17 (album version)
LabelA&M
Songwriter(s)Rick Davies, Roger Hodgson
Producer(s)Supertramp, Peter Henderson
Supertramp singles chronology
"It's Raining Again"
(1982)
"My Kind of Lady"
(1983)
"Cannonball"
(1985)
Music video
"My Kind of Lady" on YouTube

"My Kind of Lady" was the second single from Supertramp's 1982 album …Famous Last Words…. The song is a '50's-style mid-tempo love ballad; it peaked at #16 on the USA Billboard Adult Contemporary and #31 on the USA Billboard pop singles charts.[2] The lead and backing vocals were all sung by Davies, who harmonizes with himself by switching between his natural voice and a falsetto vocal. The echo-treated and natural sounding voice was sung in Davies' baritone. The falsetto passages were double tracked and mixed with a phaser. Despite being released as a single, the track was not performed live.

The song's writing credits are given to Rick Davies and Roger Hodgson, members of the band, although as indicated on the album sleeve, it is a Davies composition. Like John Lennon and Paul McCartney and Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, Davies and Hodgson joined writer's credits from 1974 until 1983, when Hodgson left Supertramp to pursue a solo career.[3]

The song was the last single released during original member Hodgson's tenure.

Cash Box predicted that the song would be successful based on the "minimal production, Rick Davies’ trademark falsetto and a catchy sax solo."[4] Billboard praised the song's "sense of fun" and said it is a throwback to 1956 with "chunky piano, bleating sax, and rhymes you can quote before you've heard them."[5]

  1. ^ "Supertramp singles".
  2. ^ "allmusic – Supertramp – Billboard singles". Retrieved 24 February 2009.
  3. ^ "Roger Hodgson website biography". Retrieved 24 February 2009.
  4. ^ "Reviews" (PDF). Cash Box. 29 January 1983. p. 12. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  5. ^ "Top Single Picks". Billboard. 22 January 1983. p. 69. Retrieved 8 February 2023.